FAQ: How do you use your typewriters?

The question “How do you use your typewriter(s)?” pops up for me fairly frequently. Often it’s collectors who love the machines and only think of using them for writing the “Great American Novel”. However there are a variety of tasks one could use them for besides conversation pieces or functional art in the home.

Below are some various recent uses I’ve made of my typewriter collection:

  • I’ve got writing projects sitting in two different machines.
  • I use one on my primary desk and another on the table behind it for typing up notes on index cards, recipes, my commonplace “book”, letters, and other personal correspondence.
  • I use a few of my portables on the porch in the mornings/evenings for journaling.
  • One machine in the hallway is for burning ideas, jokes, poetry and an occasional bit of typewriter art.
  • I often have one in the trunk of the car for typing on the go or the impromptu busking session.
  • One machine near the kitchen is always gamed up for adding to the ever-growing shopping list.
  • I’ll often get one out for scoring baseball games. (See also other baseball scoring experiments.)
  • Participating in One Typed Page and One Typed Quote
  • Typing up notes in zoom calls. I’ve got a camera mount over a Royal KMG that has its own Zoom account so people can watch the notes typed in real time.
  • Labels for folders, index card dividers, and sticky labels.
  • Addressing envelopes.
  • Writing out checks.
  • Typecasting
  • Hiding a flask or two of bourbon (large standards, and especially the Fold-A-Matic Remingtons are great for this)
  • Supplementing the nose of my bourbon and whisky collection.

At the end of the day though, unless you’re Paul Sheldon, typewriters are unitaskers and are designed to do one thing well: put text on paper. All the rest are just variations on the theme. 😁🤪☠️

Looking for other ideas? I’ve indexed a number of times people have asked this question and some of the answers I’ve run across.

Looking for the opposite of this list? Try: How do you use your typewriter? [Wrong Answers Only Edition] This is where you’ll find the quirky off-label use cases like “boat anchor”, “doorstop”, “paper weight”, etc. that the non-typewriter afficionados will be sure to appreciate throwing about. 

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My name is John McAfee. I have spent my entire life (I am currently 68) developing security and privacy software systems, and consulting to corporations and governments in containment and national security. One of my more successful creations was The McAfee Information Security Company, which recently announced that they were changing the name of their products.

It may have been because of my recent video. My most notorious association, I believe, was with the government of Belize.

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Inspired by this tweet from Matt Gemmell, here’s a look at what tools I’m currently using to tackle the projects I’m focusing on right now.

I’m trying to use paper and pencil as much as possible for work. So my main tools are an A5 Leuchtturm1917 notebook and my trusty rOtring 600 mechanical pencil in black. I use a bastardized version of the Bullet Journal system, which has replaced the 3-4 different task management apps I was using previously. I’ve extended the system a bit to fit my own needs, including some elements of Patrick Rhone’s Dash/Plus system, as well as adding in sections for tracking what I read, taking my medication, doing monthly reviews pre-migration, and using it as a commonplace book.

For writing, I use Ulysses almost exclusively. I love writing in markdown, and Ulysses’ combination of simplicity and hidden power can’t be beat. I’m just getting started on some longer form writing, though, so I plan on dusting off my copy of Scrivener for those projects.

I just made the jump over to Atom for my coding needs and it’s working out really well so far. For coding and testing emails specifically, there’s nothing better than Litmus Builder.

For illustration and graphics, I use Affinity Designer and Affinity Photo for damned near everything. It feels nice to get away from Adobe products, and I’ve found Affinity’s tools to do everything I’ve needed up to this point. Although, one of my favorite illustration apps is still Paper by FiftyThree. It’s my go-to for quick illustrations to accompany blog posts here and its color fill tool is one of the most brilliant illustration tools ever made. Now, if only we could get layers…

Most everything else I use is very boring. When I need to do things digitally, I just use Apple’s stock apps: Notes, Calendar, Mail, Reminders, iMovie, and Photos.

As far as smaller utilities go, I couldn’t live without Couleurs, CloudApp, Dropbox, 1Password, and Litmus Scope. For more work-y type stuff, I’m a huge fan of Slack, Google Docs, and all of Litmus’ tools. Instant previews is freaking amazing when you work with email on a regular basis.

For hardware, it’s either my Macbook Air (Pro for work stuff), an iPhone, or an iPad Air 2.